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2024 Patriot League Champs: Navy Men Claim 20th-Straight Team Title; Navy Women 13th

2024 PATRIOT LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIPS

TEAM SCORES (FINAL)

MEN

  1. Navy – 1639.5
  2. Army – 1589
  3. Loyola – 1099
  4. Bucknell – 1043.5
  5. BU – 600
  6. Lehigh – 448.5
  7. Lafayette – 393
  8. Holy Cross – 390
  9. Colgate – 339
  10. American – 260.5

WOMEN

  1. Navy – 1397
  2. Army – 1199
  3. BU – 946
  4. Bucknell – 863
  5. Lehigh – 850.5
  6. Loyola – 812.5
  7. Colgate – 573
  8. American – 537
  9. Holy Cross – 365
  10. Lafayette – 217

After a meet fraught with technical difficulties and controversial disqualifications, the Navy men and women have claimed another dual team title at the 2024 Patriot League Championships.

The Navy women’s title defense was never in question. The only day they didn’t end with the lead was day one, thanks to a 1-2 podium finish from BU’s divers in the 3-meter event. They quickly regained the lead atop the points ranking and never looked back, leading by 122 points going into the final day.

The final session kicked off with the 1650 freestyle. In the women’s event, Army sophomore Molly Webber hit the wall first (16:44.67). Last year, she swam the 200 fly on the final day, finishing 9th overall. Behind her, Claire Kehley of Bucknell (16:52.20) and Sarah Eldridge of Navy (17:00.83) upgraded their respective 3rd and 4th place finishes from last year.

The Army men were dominant in the mile, sweeping the podium spots. Wes Tate claimed his third individual title of the meet, clocking 15:01.53. His teammates Brice Barrieault (15:09.97) and Ian Tansill (15:12.60) rounded out the podium, helping to propel Army into the lead.

Next up was the 200 back, where Loyola’s Lily Mead defended her title in a close finish (1:56.24) over runner-up Gabi Baldwin of Navy (1:56.53). Baldwin’s teammate Ela Habjan, the 100 backstroke champion, rounded out the podium (1:57.14).

The men’s 200 backstroke was the cause of some delays later on in the meet, but the top finisher Ben Irwin of Navy claimed his third individual title in the 200 back with a dominant swim, breaking the meet record and his own conference record in the process (1:41.06). A pair of Loyola swimmers finished behind him: Henry Mueller (1:43.40) and Joe Hayburn (1:44.01).

America’s Mimi Watts successfully defended her title in the women’s 100 free, completing the sprint sweep after winning the 50 earlier in the meet (49.34). Watts was the only swimmer to break 50 seconds in the final, with Army’s Clara Williams (50.19) and Colgate’s Lucy Art (50.45) rounding out the top three.

A whopping three men got under the meet record of 43.59 in the 100 free, led by Navy’s Jonah Harm (43.47). His teammate Everet Andrew touched second (43.57), narrowly beating out Loyola’s Caleb Kelly (43.58). After this race, Army led by just 16.5 points over Navy.

Army’s Aurelie Migault completed the breaststroke after finishing 2nd in the 200 breast last year. She was victorious here, clocking a dominant 2:11.20 to clear the field by nearly three seconds.

Kohen Rankin (Army) also completed a breaststroke sweep, swimming 1:54.22 to crack the conference record set in 2013, and the meet record set in 2017. He led a quintet of swimmers who touched under the NCAA B-cut of 1:57.44. Joining him on the podium was Army teammate Kalvin Hahn (1:55.89) and Boston University’s Kyle Falkstrom (1:55.98). Army’s lead widened to 53.5 points after that race.

There was a 30 minute delay to dispute a disqualification, but when the women’s 200 fly finally got underway 400 IM champion Sarah Hardy (Lehigh) was victorious, scorching a new best time of 1:58.67 to crack the NCAA B-cut. Her teammate Julia Stevens was in the running to touch second, but faded in the final 50 (1:59.59) and was passed by Caroline Irwin of Navy (1:59.36).

Back in action after a victory in the 200 back, Ben Irwin went two-for-two in his individual events to claim the title in the 200 fly (1:43.93). Teammate Patrick Colwell touched 2nd (1:45.09), followed by Army’s Riley Groves (1:45.25). All three swimmers achieved NCAA B-cuts.

Navy’s diving prowess was on full display in the men’s 3-meter event, as Finnian Gelbach led a Navy sweep of the podium. George Moore and Blake Shaw finished 2nd and 3rd respectively, out of five total Navy divers in the final. That was a major points swing in Navy’s favor, as they led by 42.5 points going into the final relay. At that point, it would have taken a relay disqualification for the Navy men to lose the meet.

The Army women claimed a final relay victory in the 400 free relay (3:19.37) with the quartet of Clara Williams (50.13), Meghan Cole (49.84), Aurelie Migault (49.91) and Molly Webber (49.49). BU upset top seed Navy to place 2nd (3:21.88) with a team of Stella Langenbach (51.16), Han Hoang (50.01), Sydney Sorbello (50.86), and Lara Mitchell (49.85).

To put a bow on their 20th straight team title, the Navy men won the 400 free relay by over a second. Jonah Harm (43.23), Ben Denman-Grimm (43.22), Ben Stankovich (43.16), and Everet Andrew (42.89) combined for the win (2:52.50).

Major Awards

  • Men’s Rookie of the Meet – Ben Irwin (Navy)
  • Men’s Swimmer of the Meet – Jonah Harm (Navy)
  • Men’s Diver of the Meet – Finn Gelbach (Navy)
  • Men’s Swim Coach of the Year – Brian Loeffler (Loyola)
  • Men’s Diving Coach of the Year – Tim Fisher (Navy)
  • Women’s Rookie of the Meet – Ela Habjan (Navy)
  • Women’s Swimmer of the Meet – Molly Webber (Army)
  • Women’s Diver of the Meet – Sumi Cameron (BU)
  • Women’s Swim Coach of the Year – John Morrison (Navy)
  • Women’s Diving Coach of the Year – Brad Snodgrass (BU)

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Richard Tarent
8 months ago

Ahhhh another great Navy Win! Feels so Good!

Entitled
8 months ago

I learned some new best practices at the meet this weekend I hadn’t seen before: 1. Reserve your seats for the entire meet using stickers with your names on them, so if someone says “What, is your name on this seat or something?” you can say “Yes, yes it is”. 2, Curse like a sailor at someone who attempts to sit in one of the seats, regardless if the “owners” are there for the session or not. 3. Be sure to standup during the end of races so absolutely no one can see behind you, even if they are at the top of the stands. Yeah, to hell with everybody else I say. High class…

Shark
Reply to  Entitled
8 months ago

You could have just sat on the other side of the pool where the bleachers were empty

Entitled
Reply to  Shark
8 months ago

Sure, we could have although even the other side was pretty crowded too. Were there seat assignments associated with the tickets that we bought? First come first served I get it, but pre-assigned seats for the whole darn meet? C’mon… with stickers and all that’s just being selfish, especially since all teams had seniors and most parents who arrived early enough would have at least liked to see the finishes of their kids’ races.

Meet Records
8 months ago

The 100 free meet record is 43.27 set last year by Caleb Kelly of Loyola

KSW
8 months ago

it never made much sense to me why Air Force doesn’t compete in this conference

I Suck
Reply to  KSW
8 months ago

Air force is in Colorado. Too far away from the East Coast where all the other schools are

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Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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